Anonymous wrote:Staff was told this morning if they need a bathroom to go to middle school 3 blocks away.
That's just crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Why is a building so recently renovated having these issues?
Here's where things get tricky with the bathroom stalls. Instead of contracting directly with the Pennsylvania-based supplier of the school's "toilet partitions and compartments," Forrester and Department of General Services records show the $100,000 contract for that work instead went to another general contractor: Blue Skye Construction.
Blue Skye is a well-known local construction company that was very successful at landing city contracts when former Mayor Adrian Fenty was in office. In 2010, the city paid Blue Skye and a joint venture partner nearly $20 million directly for construction work. In 2009, Blue Skye and Donatelli Development were awarded the rights to development of the land next to the Minnesota Avenue Metro station. Blue Skye's president, Scottie Irving, was close to Fenty and cut an ad for his 2010 reelection campaign.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another LEED building with maintenance issues. I'm shocked, SHOCKED.
When our school was up for renovation, the ANC warned us that he last school in the Ward to be renovated had a lot of maintenance issues. The LEED certified equipment is all very integrated, so if one system goes down, the rest do too. Public buildings go for the cheapest equipment that meets the standard, and it is often of poor quality.
My building at work is also LEED: noise , toilets that don't flush, integrated ventilation that means a chemical spill in the garage rendered all 12 floors uninhabitable for a week.
That's interesting! LEED certification equates with quality and integrity, or so DGS and many city admins
would have us believe. I'd also like to see DGS publicly explain this mess!
LEED certification only means that all the products and materials in the building, and the overall design, are 'green' products.
But if DGS/DCPS choose the lowest end 'green' products and materials available, it will not last.
I think the issue is not with LEED but rather with DGS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another LEED building with maintenance issues. I'm shocked, SHOCKED.
When our school was up for renovation, the ANC warned us that he last school in the Ward to be renovated had a lot of maintenance issues. The LEED certified equipment is all very integrated, so if one system goes down, the rest do too. Public buildings go for the cheapest equipment that meets the standard, and it is often of poor quality.
My building at work is also LEED: noise , toilets that don't flush, integrated ventilation that means a chemical spill in the garage rendered all 12 floors uninhabitable for a week.
That's interesting! LEED certification equates with quality and integrity, or so DGS and many city admins
would have us believe. I'd also like to see DGS publicly explain this mess!
Anonymous wrote:Another LEED building with maintenance issues. I'm shocked, SHOCKED.
When our school was up for renovation, the ANC warned us that he last school in the Ward to be renovated had a lot of maintenance issues. The LEED certified equipment is all very integrated, so if one system goes down, the rest do too. Public buildings go for the cheapest equipment that meets the standard, and it is often of poor quality.
My building at work is also LEED: noise , toilets that don't flush, integrated ventilation that means a chemical spill in the garage rendered all 12 floors uninhabitable for a week.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thanks. They have a point IMO.
Who is responsible for maintenance, DGS or DCPS? I'm not even sure.
DC DGS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see no stories about this. How did you hear?
Twitter.
https://twitter.com/PerryStein?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
Anonymous wrote:I hope they get a ton of publicity. This is ridiculous.